About the Author: Liz Wooten, LPC, is the founder of Enlitens and a rebellious academic dedicated to dismantling the broken mental health system. As an AuDHD therapist with years of front-line crisis experience, she brings a deep, lived understanding to her work. Read Liz’s Full Story Here
Let’s talk about your energy budget. Not his. Yours.
You’ve been told the bone-deep, soul-crushing exhaustion you feel is “just stress.” That you need a girl’s night out or a yoga class. This is like telling someone on the brink of bankruptcy that they just need to find a few coupons. It is a profound and insulting misunderstanding of the scale of the problem.
The lie you’ve been telling yourself is that your suffering is your fault. That if you were a better, more loving partner, this wouldn’t feel so hard.
Your burnout is not a temporary overdraft. It is a state of profound, systemic bankruptcy. It is the end result of being the primary co-regulator, social shock absorber, and emotional accountant for a neurodiverse partnership. Your accounts are not just low; they are empty. And your entire system is beginning to shut down.
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To understand your burnout, we have to audit the invisible, high-interest loans you’ve been forced to take out every single day.
The Co-Regulation Loan: Co-regulating a partner through their unmasking journey is one of the most energy-intensive tasks a human can perform. You are constantly lending out your own nervous system’s regulatory capacity to help stabilize theirs, leaving you in a state of chronic deficit. This isn’t a psychological concept; it’s a neurobiological reality.
The Translation Loan: You are the full-time social translator, smoothing over blunt comments and explaining sudden exits from parties in your Maplewood neighborhood. This constant code-switching and social monitoring is a high-demand cognitive process.
The Household Management Loan: You do the dishes. Again. Because he used all his spoons at work. You manage the schedule, the bills, the emotional temperature of the house. You have taken on the Executive Function labor for two people.
This is not a sustainable economic model. Your bankruptcy was not a possibility; it was an inevitability.
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How do you know if you’re in a state of temporary overdraft (stress) or a full-blown bankruptcy (burnout)? You look for the signs of your own system’s collapse as it begins to liquidate its core assets to survive.
Loss of Your Own Executive Function: You start forgetting appointments. You can’t initiate simple tasks. Your own “C-Suite” is being furloughed because all your cognitive resources are being redirected.
Increased Sensory Sensitivities: You feel “touched-out.” The sound of the kids playing is suddenly unbearable. Your brain can no longer afford to maintain its own sensory filters.
Social and Emotional Shutdown: You don’t have the energy to call a friend back. You feel a growing resentment and a profound sense of grief for the partner and the future you thought you had. This isn’t you being selfish; it is a desperate act of energy conservation.
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You cannot fix a state of bankruptcy with a single paycheck. The cure for stress might be a vacation. The cure for your burnout is a radical process of debt restructuring. It requires a declaration of bankruptcy—a period of deep, unapologetic rest. It requires building a new, sustainable economic model for your life, one that honors your energy budget.
You are not just a “supportive partner.” You are a survivor of a resource crisis. And the path back is not about “trying harder.” It’s about finally, radically, and compassionately refusing to take out another loan. It’s time to invest in your own Therapy.
A deep dive into the “Double Empathy Problem,” the neuroscientific reason why communication can feel so impossible in a neurodiverse relationship.
The feeling that your burnout is a personal failing is a symptom of internalized invalidation. This is our manifesto on why your struggle is real.
The work isn’t about eliminating stress; it’s about building a nervous system that can handle it. A manifesto on the true goal of healing.
*The information here is meant to guide and inform, not replace the care of a qualified healthcare professional. If you have questions or concerns about a medical or mental-health condition, please reach out to a trusted provider. The examples shared are based on general personas—no personal health details are used. At Enlitens, your privacy is a top priority, and we fully comply with HIPAA regulations to keep your information safe and confidential.
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Take one second. That’s all I’m asking.
Do not try to “calm down.” Do not try to “fix it.” Do not listen to the voice screaming that you need to do something right now.
Just be here, with me, for one single breath.
My name is Liz. I’ve spent years working overnight in the ER, sitting with people on what was often the worst night of their entire lives. I have sat in the eye of the hurricane, and I can tell you with absolute certainty that the chaos you feel right now is not the truth.
It is a storm in your nervous system. And a storm is just a weather pattern. It is not you. It is not permanent. And you do not have to navigate it alone.
Right now, your brain’s alarm system is screaming. The logical part of your brain has been taken offline. That is a normal, brilliant, biological survival response. But you and I are going to bring it back online, together.
We are going to do one, simple, physical thing. This is not a bulls*hit mindfulness exercise. This is a direct, manual override for your nervous system.
Place your hand on your chest.
Can you feel that? The rise and fall. The rhythm. That is the anchor. That is the proof that you are here, in this moment, and you are alive.
Keep your hand there.
Now, we are going to make one choice. The storm is telling you there are a million overwhelming things you have to do. That is a lie. There are only three choices right now, and you only need to pick one.
This is the button you push when you need the paramedics or the police to show up. This is the “bring the fire truck” button.
This is the national, 24/7 lifeline. It is free, it is confidential, and it is staffed by trained counselors who are ready to listen without judgment. This is the “I need a lifeline” button.
Behavioral Health Response (BHR) is our community’s lifeline. They provide free, confidential telephone counseling and can connect you with local resources. This is the “I need a local guide” button.